Dissertation: Tobias Lindström
Thesis defence
Date: Thursday 13 June 2024
Time: 13.00 – 19.00
Location: Hörsal 9, Hus D, Universitetsvägen 10, Stockholm University
Animals, humans and miniature beings. Multispecies connections in the Pitted Ware culture.
Tobias Lindström´s dissertation will take place on the 13th of June, at 13.00.
Open Access: Animals, humans and miniature beings. Multispecies connections in the Pitted Ware culture (diva-portal.org)
Opponent
Professor Joakim Goldhahn, the University of Adelaide.
Assessment committee
Professor Jan Apel, Stockholms universitet
Professor Karin Dirke, Stockholms universitet
Docent Ludvig Papmehl-Dufay, Linnéuniversitetet
Reserve assessment committee
Docent Ing-Marie Back-Danielsson, Lunds universitet
Chairman
Professor Andrew Jones, Stockholms universitet
Supervisor
Professor Fredrik Fahlander, Stockholms universitet
Abstract
Animals, humans and miniature beings. Multispecies connections in the Pitted Ware culture. This thesis attempts to understand the relationships between humans and animals in the Middle Neolithic (c. 3300-2300 BC) Pitted Ware culture (PWC) in Eastern Sweden and the Baltic islands of Gotland and Åland. This is accomplished through an examination of the zoomorphic and anthropomorphic clay figurines that have been found on many PWC sites in the study area, and to a lesser extent also the use and deposition of animal bones. The archaeological material is approached using a theoretical framework that draws upon hunter-gatherer relational ontologies and new materialisms.
Comparisons between the anthropomorphic figurines and the zoomorphic figurines reveal clear morphological differences that are not attributable to the bodily differences between humans and animals. Instead, it is argued that they indicate contrasts in human-animal and human-human interactions respectively, and that they also had bearing on the engagements and relationships between humans and figurines. The chronological and geographical distribution of figurines further suggest that the anthropomorphic figurines represent a younger, more localized development in the PWC figurine tradition commencing around 2900 BC. This could possibly also be understood against the backdrop of a general ‘anthropomorphization’ in Europe during the 3rd millennium BC and the wider societal changes in northern Europe.
In contrast to the figurines, which are uncommon in burials and deposits, animal bones have obviously been selectively deposited at many PWC sites. Unmodified animal bones found in certain features, deposits and burials reveal interesting patterns, where bones from the limbs and heads are overrepresented. The parts chosen can be described as those that relate to the perception and movements of the various animals deposited. The treatment of the animal bones might be understood as a way of dealing with a persistent animal awareness that resided in the bones and needed to be controlled.
Zoomorphic figurines and animal bones thus seem to have had complementary uses at the PWC sites and configured human-animal relations in different ways. The figurines might have been involved in influencing prospective prey animals, while the deposition of animal bones was a means of handling animals that had been successfully killed.
Last updated: June 10, 2024
Source: Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies